The Hertie Foundation and the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS) are delighted to announce the winner of the Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize: Prof. DrJulijana Gjorgjieva (DE), who will receive the EUR 100,000 award for her scientific achievement in the field of theoretical neuroscience.
Julijana Gjorgjieva is a Professor of Computational Neurosciences at the School of Life Sciences at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and a Research Group Leader at the Max Planck Institute for Brain Research in Frankfurt, Germany. Her work focuses on the decoding mechanisms in the processing of sensory signals and the development of the relevant neuronal networks. In 2011, she completed her PhD in applied mathematics at the University of Cambridge (UK) and spent five years as a post-doctoral researcher at Harvard University and Brandeis University (US). Prof. Gjorgjieva is a member and is on the steering committee of the Bernstein Network for Computational Neuroscience and a member of the FENS-Kavli Network of Excellence.
Congratulating Prof. Gjorgjieva on behalf of FENS, President Prof. Jean-Antoine Girault commented: “For FENS, the prize is an important contribution to recognising outstanding research like Julijana Gjorgjieva’s and to supporting young neuroscientists in furthering their careers.”
Dr Astrid Proksch, Managing Director of the non-profit Hertie Foundation, highlighted that “with the help of her models, Prof. Gjorgjieva has discovered important principles which regulate the self-organisation of neuronal networks during development, and with the Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize, we would like to lend further support to her outstanding work and promote her scientific career.”
The Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists prize is awarded every two years by the Hertie Foundation in collaboration with FENS. The prize also includes an invitation to hold the Eric Kandel Prize Lecture at the FENS Forum 2022 in Paris, France.
The Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize awarded by the Hertie Foundation and FENS recognises the work of outstanding early career scientists in the field of neuroscience and helps advance their careers as researchers.
The Hertie Foundation and the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS) have announced the winner of the 2019 prize for early career neuroscientists: Misha B. Ahrens, PhD.
Born in The Netherlands in 1981, he studied mathematics and physics at Cambridge University. He did a PhD in computational neuroscience at the Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit, University College London, in the group of Prof. Maneesh Sahani and Prof. Jennifer Linden. He then worked as a Sir Henry Wellcome Postdoctoral Fellow at Harvard University in the lab of Prof. Florian Englert.
In 2012 he moved to Janelia Research Campus of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute to start his own lab. His lab works on understanding how behavior arises from information processing in distributed brain circuits, neuromodulatory systems, and glial cells of the zebrafish. His scientific work has been supported by the Wellcome Trust and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute et al. and has been awarded by The Simons Collaboration on the Global Brain.
He was awarded by Prof. Kandel on 24 September 2019 in a ceremony in Frankfurt/Main, Germany. He will aso give a lecture at the FENS Forum 2020 in Glasgow, UK.
Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize 2017
The Hertie Foundation and the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS) have announced the winner of their prize for young neuroscientists: Marta Zlatic, a Croatian/British neurobiologist, will receive the Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize 2017.
It is the fifth time that the Hertie Foundation and FENS have awarded the prize, which recognises the work of outstanding young scientists and gives them the means to advance their careers as researchers.
Dr Marta Zlatic conducts research at Janelia Research Campus, part of the prestigious Howard Hughes Medical Institute in the USA, and at Cambridge University in the UK. The prize is for her contribution to the understanding of the neural mechanisms underlying decision-making in the brains of animals. All living creatures are constantly making decisions and the nervous system controls behaviours that are essential for survival, such as flight or fight. Zlatic researches the bias towards various behaviours, the choice of one particular behaviour and the subsequent assessment of its success.
Together with her research group, Marta Zlatic discovered circuit mechanisms of competitive interactions between neurons in the nervous system of Drosophila larvae, which promote certain behaviours and suppress others. She also discovered processes that the nervous system uses to combine various sensory inputs in order to learn lessons for future decision-making.
The outstanding feature of Marta Zlatic’s work was the combination of a number of different cutting-edge methods. The brain of the fruit fly larva is less complex than mammal brains, which makes it easier to map. Since basic neural processes in the brains of insects and humans are similar, her studies pave the way for further research on the human brain.
The prize money attached to the Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize comes in two parts: EUR 50,000 for the winner’s personal use, and up to EUR 50,000 for developing a scientific cooperation arrangement. By working with an internationally recognised neuroscientist, the winner will be able to advance her career in research. The prize is offered in collaboration with the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS) and is named after American Nobel Prize winner Prof. Eric Kandel, one of the most famous living neuroscientists. Eric Kandel, who works at Columbia University in New York, will present the prize in person at a ceremony on 6 June in Frankfurt. The award falls under the patronage of the German Minister for Education and Research, Prof. Johanna Wanka.
Marta Zlatic will give the Eric Kandel Prize Lecture during FENS Forum 2018 in Berlin.
The Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize was announced in summer 2014 together with FENS for the fourth time. In spring 2015 an international panel of judges, including three Nobel laureates, selected Prof. Dr. Yasser Roudi as the 2015 winner.
Prof. Dr. Yasser Roudi was born in 1981. He studied physics at the Scharif University in Teheran and completed a PhD at the SISSA in Trieste, Italy. After a research stay at the University College London and at the Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics in Stockholm he became assistant professor at the Kavli Institute, University of Trondheim. Since 2014 he holds a chair for theoretical neurosciences there.
With the help of methods from statistical physics, he has made significant contributions to the understanding of information processing in neuronal networks. Among these contributions is his work in collaboration with Nobel Prize winners Edvard and May-Britt Moser which has lead to the understanding of the network connectivity and mechanisms underlying grid cell formation.
Prof. Roudi is laureate of of numerous scientific prizes. He received e. g. the Nansen Prize four young scientists by the Norwegian Academy of Science (2014) and in the 2013 the Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters awarded him the prize for young scietists.
The Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize 2015 was presented to Prof. Roudi during an official ceremony on 28 May 2015 in St. Paul’s Church in Frankfurt am Main by Prof. Eric Kandel, the neuroscientist and Nobel Prize winner, Prof. Monica Di Luca, the President of the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies, and Dr Frank-J. Weise, Chairman of the Hertie Foundation. The presentation of the Hertie Senior Research Professorship in Neuroscience 2015 was presented at the same event together with a panel discussion between Eric Kandel and the current Nobel laureates, May-Britt and Edvard Moser, about the role of prizes in sciences.
Following the awards there was a second panel discussion on “the brain at the couch – the psychoanalysis on the way into the neurosciences”, involving Prof. Eric Kandel and Prof. Mark Solms, psychoanalyst and neuroscientist. The discussion was moderated by Felicitas von Lovenberg (Feuilleton/Literature, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung).
Prof. Sonja Hofer was born in Munich in 1977. She studied biology at the Technical University of Munich and completed a PhD in 2006 at the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Martinsried (Germany). In 2011 she set up her own research group at University College London and has been an assistant professor at the Biozentrum of the University of Basel since 2013. She studies the development and detailed organisation of the visual system, particularly the way in which sensory information is processed and stored in the neuronal networks of the cerebrum. Through her research, she has discovered fundamental principles governing the ways in which nerve cells are connected in local networks, and was able to demonstrate that structural changes in cerebral networks can be used for long-term storage of information.
She has received a number of prizes for her scientific research, including the Otto Hahn Medal awarded by the Max Planck Society, and the Wellcome Beit Prize awarded by the Wellcome Trust.
The Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize 2013 was presented to Prof. Hofer during an official ceremony on 27 September 2013 in St. Paul’s Church in Frankfurt am Main by Prof. Eric Kandel, the neuroscientist and Nobel Prize winner, Prof. Marian Joëls, the President of the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies, and Dr John Feldmann, Chairman of the Hertie Foundation. The presentation of the Hertie Senior Research Professorship in Neuroscience 2013 was presented at the same event.
Following the awards there was a panel discussion on “The creative human: Art and science in conversation”, involving Prof. Eric Kandel, Herlinde Koelbl, the art photographer and film maker, and painter Prof. Markus Lüpertz (the discussion was moderated by Gert Scobel, ZDF/3sat journalist).
Prof. Henrik Mouritsen was born in Aalborg (Denmark) in 1971. He has been a professor at the University of Oldenburg (Germany) since 2007, where he is head of the Animal Navigation (Neurosensorik) research group.
Using a wide range of innovative and multidisciplinary techniques that had not previously been used in bird navigation research, Prof. Mouritsen and his international research group succeeded in identifying four areas of the brain that birds can use to perceive the Earth’s magnetic field in two different ways: two areas process light-related information from the eye, which the birds use to perceive the compass direction of the magnetic field visually. The other two areas are linked via nerve tracts to the upper part of the beak, where scientists suspect there is a magnetic sensor of iron-mineral-based crystalline structures. Prof. Mouritsen has already received numerous prizes and distinctions for his research, including a Lichtenberg Professorship from the VW Foundation in 2006.
The Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize 2011 was presented to Prof. Mouritsen during an official ceremony on 1 June 2011 in St. Paul’s Church in Frankfurt am Main, alongside the Hertie Senior Research Professorship in Neuroscience 2011, in the presence of the Mayor of Frankfurt am Main, Ms Petra Roth. Three Nobel Prize winners for medicine took part in a panel discussion with Gert Scobel (ZDF/3sat journalist) on “An ideal world? How scientists see the future”.
Dr Simon E. Fisher, born 1970, conducts research at Oxford University (Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics) and has been head of the Molecular Neuroscience group there since 2002. He has been Director of the new Language and Genetics Department at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in Nijmegen (Netherlands) since October 2010. His research focuses on the influence of genes involved in the development of speech and language skills. In 1998, while studying a family affected by speech disorders (articulation disorders), Dr Fisher and Anthony Monaco discovered a segment on chromosome 7 that they were able to relate to the family’s distinctive speech traits. By researching the genes of this family and of an unrelated boy displaying the same symptoms, the researchers were able to identify the “language gene” FOXP2 for the first time. Dr Fisher has received numerous academic prizes and distinctions for his research work, and gave the Francis Crick Lecture at the Royal Society in London in 2008.
The Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize was presented to Dr Fisher during an official ceremony at the University of Zurich on 6 October 2009.